Pull-Up
The real deal. You hang from a bar with completely straight arms, pull yourself up until your chin clears the bar, and lower back down under control. Five clean reps is a milestone that a surprising majority of adults never reach — hit it and you've passed a genuinely meaningful strength checkpoint.
The pull-up is one of the few upper-body movements that hits lats, biceps, rear delts, and core simultaneously. It's also the gateway to everything else on the bar: muscle-ups, front levers, and L-sit pull-ups all assume you can do a clean strict pull-up. Skip the kipping and swinging — strict is what buys you the next level.
How to do it
Grip the bar with your hands shoulder-width apart, palms facing away (overhand). Let yourself hang with arms fully extended and shoulder blades active (not shrugged up). Pull your elbows down and back, keeping your chest proud, until your chin is clearly above the bar. Lower yourself all the way back to a dead hang under control.
Target
5 clean reps with full range of motion — dead hang to chin over bar, no swinging.
Key tips
- Start every rep from a dead hang, arms fully extended
- Pull your elbows down and back, not just your hands up toward the bar
- Chin clearly above the bar at the top — no cheating with a neck crane
- Lower yourself with control — don't just drop
- No kipping, swinging, or leg kicks
Progression
Before this: own Pull-Up Negatives at 3×5 with a 5-second descent. If you're close but not quite there, try band-assisted pull-ups or jumping pull-ups for a few weeks.
Next step: once 5 clean reps feels comfortable, build the transition by practicing Muscle-Up Negatives in Level 4 — lowering slowly from the top of a muscle-up.